Beautiful Disaster backdrop
Beautiful Disaster

Beautiful Disaster

6.6 / 1020231h 36m

Synopsis

College freshman Abby tries to distance herself from her dark past while resisting her attraction to bad boy Travis.

Genre: Romance, Drama, Comedy

Status: Released

Director: Roger Kumble

Website:

Main Cast

Dylan Sprouse

Dylan Sprouse

Travis Maddox

Virginia Gardner

Virginia Gardner

Abby Abernathy

Austin North

Austin North

Shepley Maddox

Libe Barer

Libe Barer

America Mason

Rob Estes

Rob Estes

Benny

Brian Austin Green

Brian Austin Green

Mick Abernathy

Autumn Reeser

Autumn Reeser

Professor Felder

Samuel Larsen

Samuel Larsen

Jesse Viveros

Manal El-Feitury

Manal El-Feitury

Bursa

Jack Hesketh

Jack Hesketh

Trenton Maddox

Trailer

User Reviews

CinemaSerf

I fully expected to hate this - but, well, I didn't. "Abby" (Virginia Gardner) is fed up picking up the pieces for her gambler father so heads to college in California. First night there, she and her pal "America" (Libe Barer) head off to a student equivalent of "Fight Club" where she meets the bare knuckle champion "Travis" (Dylan Sprouse). Replete with some of his latest victim's blood on her top, she feigns a loathing for the man but... Shortly afterwards, their dorm water supply runs dry and she has to move in with her friend. Guess what? Yep, one of her new roomies is none other than the mischievous pugilist. There now follows a rather contrived - and frankly ridiculous - bet that sees her end up sharing his bed for a month, Will they, won't they? That doesn't matter - this film isn't about jeopardy. It's about pretty people having a bit of a laugh and hoping some of that rubs off on us. I found there to a bit of chemistry between the two, "Travis" is actually quite charismatic and the humour is marginally more sophisticated than we would find in, say, the interminable "After..." series of teen melodramas. It's trying to do grown up, and it makes a half-decent fist of it. The last twenty minutes are particularly daft though - and did rather ruin the thing. It certainly does not need a cinema viewing (even though there were certainly 50+ people at the screening I attended) - but even if it is too long, it's still an OK watch.